ORLANDO, Fla. — If John Fox gets a chance to do it over again, he'll re-do it.

Let's say the Broncos — with Peyton Manning returning on offense and DeMarcus Ware, Aqib Talib and T.J. Ward added to their defense — again reach the Super Bowl in the 2014 season.

What would Fox do differently in the two weeks leading up to the final game?

"Probably everything," Fox said.

His answer prompted laughter at his table during the AFC coaches breakfast Tuesday that is part of the NFL owners meetings at Ritz-Carlton Grande Lakes resort.

Broncos fans are no doubt relieved. Whatever the Broncos did to prepare for their Super Bowl XLVIII game against the Seattle Seahawks seven weeks ago, they should never repeat it. The Seahawks drummed the Broncos, 43-8 in a blowout decided from the poorly executed first snap.

For their Super Bowl week in New Jersey, the Broncos stayed at a Jersey City Hyatt Hotel from their arrival Sunday, Jan. 26 until Saturday, Feb. 1, when Fox wanted to get his players away from family distractions and moved the team to a Newark airport Renaissance Hotel.

The Broncos are again the early favorites to win the AFC this year. If they should get another crack at the big game, a hotel change on Super Bowl eve is unlikely.

"Seriously, we're a little bit goofy," Fox said. "You change a lot of things — some people say you're superstitious. Like if we lose on the road, we don't stay at that same hotel the next time we go there. So you change if it didn't work."

During his breakfast news conference, Fox was relaxed, wearing a mango-colored golf shirt, shorts and casual dress shoes. But there also were times when the lingering emotional scars were evident from the unhappy ending to an otherwise successful season.

"If you don't win that last game? It gnaws on you," he said. "And it gnaws on you for a while. It never really goes away. Like that scar. But you learn from it and you move on, and you do everything you can you get better."

Fox said he was inspired when asked about the presentation Wade Davis made Monday to NFL coaches and general managers regarding a player's sexual orientation and its place in an NFL locker room. Davis, now 36, was cut by several NFL teams and never made a 53-man roster. It wasn't until after Davis gave up chasing his football dream that he publicly revealed he was gay.

"I thought it was the most incredible presentation I've seen since I've been here, and I've been here for a long time," said Fox, who is entering his 13th season as an NFL head coach, fourth with the Broncos. "It's an obvious thing that has become a bigger part of our NFL. Like everything, you've got to learn how to motivate and deal with your locker room. It is a brotherhood, it is a family. You need diversification in everything. Even sexual orientation — that's got to be in the conversation now. I thought it was pretty profound. It was eye-opening for me."

Fox said he would relay Davis' presentation to his coaches.

"You know, I've probably not done as good a job of that up until now, but after Wade's presentation, it's high on my list the first time I talk to my staff when I get back, and my football team," Fox said.

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